exactly the time when you need to be connected, and ten years ago or five years ago in the wake of katrina, it was possible to say, well, look, you know, the networks are young. these guys are investing. they got the right incentives to make it reliable, and for the industry to say, no regulation, no standards or enforcement, you know, we're past that. there's a point in which you have to bite the bullet and say, look, guys, we're all about, doing a great job or not a great job, but too many people are dependent on you to let this just be private sector decision making. we at least have to know how reliable networks are, we have to plan, and, frankly, in an emergency, it is really everyone's benefit to have some of the rules in place. i know that everybody focuses on cost, and that's right. you know, this is one of the criticism that the blog post came from a friend of mine from cato saying, yeah, everyone wants cheap phones until there's an emergency, and then where's the backup power? that costs money. there's a decision you make about the tradeoffs. there's good things about the current